Hi, everyone. Kumar Dattatreyan here with the Meridian Point. And today I'm very pleased to be joined by Stacey Nye, who is the president of the FixCode Global and vice president of Ancient Gene Technologies. With over two decades of experience in Olympic event operations and management, Stacey now leads groundbreaking initiatives in both personal transformation and sustainable solutions. Her current work spans teaching the innovative fix code technique for emotional healing to implementing circular economy solutions for compostable diapers in Samoa, which, I mean, what a breadth of experience there. Stacy's journey exemplifies how embracing disruption can lead to meaningful innovation across multiple domains. So as you know, our channel, this podcast, is all about the relationship between disruption and innovation, and Stacey exemplifies that. So without further ado, I'm going to bring Stacey on the stage here, and we'll get started. Hi, Stacey. How are you doing? I'm great. Thank you. How are you? Thank you so much for welcoming me into your platform. Thanks. Yeah, you're welcome. You know, one of the things that's interesting is you're ahead of me time-wise, right? You're like literally on the other side of the world and far south in the world. So you're in Samoa, is that right? I am. Yeah. Yeah. I just spent the last year in Samoa. We came back after Christmas and are continuing this groundbreaking project showcasing these people that I'm working with, compostable diapers to the world, mostly to the global south, because the global south is actually getting hit the hardest with the plastic and the volume of millions and millions of diapers that are now rolling up on their shores and they have nowhere to put them um you know so um the incredible people that I have chosen to work with over my entire life actually um this person just happens to be my sister uh who uh her husband um groundbreaking thinkers, innovators, definitely disruptors in the circular economy world have asked me to play a part in the operations of building their dream of what's in their head out in real life, which is really my skill. It is a skill that I used with the Olympic Games. It's taking the complex problems and turning them into how one person can experience the process. So even though we're going to be moving millions and millions and millions of people through the process, it brings it down to the individual's experience and how that one individual can impact the world and the decisions that they make. And by joining this project and supporting it, people from around the world can definitely support this project. That, yeah, it's literally changing the world. Let me ask a few questions. You have a lot of passion, a lot of energy, and certainly a lot of passion for this project in particular. So tell me a little bit about just disruption in general and the role it's played in your own journey of transformation. Interesting. Yeah, I've never, my sister, my sister absolutely identifies as a disruptor. And so does actually Daniel, who is the creator and founder of the Fixco technique. So I feel like I'm actually drawn to disruptors because I can see their vision. I'm passionate about what they see. And with the skill set that I have, I'm able to take get it out of their heads and be able to then implement it in in real time in in the world so um uh my passion is actually supporting innovators disruptors people that are going to make a difference on this planet and the two right at this point I'm supporting two incredible um innovators and disruptors uh one in the mental health and in the um in the energetic world. So I feel like my ultimate client is humanity. The person that I get up, the people that I get up for every day is humanity when it comes to the fixed code, because what Daniel has created in the technique allows us emotional freedom. It gives us, by using the technique, it gives us emotional freedom and clarity and peace. And then, you know, hearing my sisters and her husband's dreams and ideas to implement the compostable diapers into, at first, the Global South so that we prove it out. And we're impacting and helping the people that are at the front line that are being impacted the most with this issue of plastic diapers that are loaded with plastics and oils and hurting people. environment and hurting our children and our our world um so I feel like on that front of my life um my ultimate client is is the planet and the oceans and everything um that is in that circular economy part of it so I feel very lucky and very um grateful that I have had these opportunities in my life and, and I took them. I mean, I could have let them go by. I could have not done anything about it, but you know, that's not how I was brought up. And, and it's fun. Like my sister and I have, we have the same values. We have the same like gumption and grit and, and courage. Yeah. And so does Daniel. So I really, again, I've aligned myself with these incredible minds that have allowed me and given me the privilege to work with them side by side and take their ideas and implement them and turn them into a live thing. where people can actually move through the process. So from a mom with a baby, with a diaper can move through our, our system, that circular economy system to every diaper that every baby uses in our program within eight to twelve weeks turned in turns into high gradeable dirt, which again is now we move back into talking to the farmers in Samoa. Like we're proving this out. It's pretty spectacular. And every time we open a bin and we've got this incredible dirt, you know, even the moms, the villages are astounded. Yeah. Yeah. I think there's a lag as a bit of a lag since you're on the other side of the world. Um, I want to kind of hone in or just dive into each of these, uh, individually first, the fixed code and what it does. and then the diapers and your involvement in that. Let's start with the fixed code. So my understanding that it aims to disrupt traditional approaches to emotional healing. So what was it that inspired this methodology and how does it differ from conventional approaches? Absolutely. This is a great question. So Daniel's background, he's now almost a thirty five years master practitioner in NLP. He's a master, master hypnotherapist also. So he's got. Decades of studying behind him and about twenty years ago, he had an experience, spiritual experience that. Removed. all of his horrible feelings, fears, hesitations, heartbroken, all of these things. Because he, unfortunately, has groundbreaking pioneers. It always comes with everything falling apart first, right? That's the hero's journey. So he is no exception. And so when, when his world was falling apart about years ago this spiritual experience happened for him and he was activated in this incredible way. And we've got these, I mean, our stories are beautiful and our stories that come from a beautiful spiritual space. But, but the science of this is that through this experience, it was like an electromagnet. It was like a Stargate. He says was above his head and it scanned him. Um, and it removed all of the horrible feelings, fears, broken heart, betrayal, like all of these things that only moments before were crushing him. Um, he didn't want to get out of bed. He didn't want to go to work, none of those things. So after this spiritual experience, he could feel none of those things. He felt joy and complete peace and calmness. And because of the training he had been. over decades and decades which this is a little bit of a fun tidbit of the of Daniel's story about thirty five years ago this nobody nobody really knew this guy was Tony Robbins was in Toronto Canada for like a speaking engagement and Daniel chose all those years ago to buy a ticket to go and see this guy called Tony Robbins, because Daniel was in sales. He owned pizzerias. He owned video stores at the time. So he was in sales. So this guy, Tony Robbins was supposedly really good at helping salesmen. be better at sales. So he bought a ticket. He said it was like eighty bucks. He went down into the city and he attended this conference or this weekend retreat with this guy called Tony Robbins and Daniel being Daniel sat right at the front was taking notes like crazy and at the break Tony Robbins walked over to Daniel and And suggested to him that he takes something called NLP and something called hypnotherapy. So Daniel, of course, after this conference was pumped, went and signed up for these courses and started really learning all of this stuff. So it was Tony Robbins told him to go do it. And so he did it. And it changed his life because he. Oh, go ahead. Yeah. Can you explain for the audience what NLP is? I mean, I know what it is, but it would be good for folks to know. Sure. Yeah. So it's neuro-linguistic programming and it it's, it's a fundamental thing. It's, it's not, I don't know much about it. I didn't study it. That's not my background at all. It's all Daniel stuff, but what these two platforms that he studied, gave him was the questions to ask after the spiritual experience. Because he was very aware that this Stargate experience, this electromagnet thing that went around him and through him, not all of those horrible feelings. So he started to ask real scientific quantum questions. And through these questions, he was being downloaded this incredible knowledge of what these things are, what horrible feelings are, what fears are, how they work, and then how he could use what he just experienced and put together in language how to help others. And that's what he did. So for the three years between four years between his spiritual experience and when I met him, he had figured out really like ninety nine percent of what today still is the fixed code. So and when I met him, he didn't have a name. This was just kind of something he did. And he was doing it at trade shows. He didn't, like I said, he didn't really have a name for it, but my experience, how, how I came into this was in two thousand and two. My husband and I at the time had a horrible experience, a very traumatic that ended up. We lost everything. We lost each other like it. It was a pretty traumatic couple of years. And by the time I met Daniel in twenty ten, we had now finally separated the traumas had just compiled on top of each other. And because of the life that I had led prior to that night of the trauma, I didn't really have skills to deal with hell. I didn't understand fear. I didn't understand the world was scary. I didn't understand. Like I had not been exposed to any of that. My upbringing had been quite, um, um, forward thinking, quite magical, actually quite, I was surrounded by brilliance and excellence my entire life. Um, there was no bad, it was all kind of, okay, let's take that and let's build upon that. How, what can we learn? It was always conversation. I never kind of, I'd never known hell. And after that experience in two thousand and two, hell came screaming into my life. It was scary and terrifying and debilitating and breathtaking. And I didn't know how to cope with any of it. So I kind of didn't, I just kept going and putting a smile on my face every day until I got separated in, in, in the kind of the late at late part of twenty, two thousand and nine. And when I met Daniel in twenty ten, which again, if you follow our spiritual journey, we were meant to meet and it was a contract. We were meant to meet in twenty ten. We were meant to create all of this together and co-found what is now called the Fix Code Global and all the training that goes with this and teaching the world how to do this because we were meant to come together and do this together. So the Fix Code is all about A technique that allows us to remove those horrible feelings and fears that are stopping us from living the life that we want. From moving through ascension. From living a life of peace and evolving. And right now, this technique was designed for right now. For the masses. Because... The people that I've been, that we've been training over the last. Are the pioneers with us. They are our frontline that when this happened on the planet, we had enough people that know how to do this, that are going to be able to help thousands and thousands of people really, really quickly. Um, so we're excited about this time because we know we're ready. We. have an incredible team of people that know how to do this and we welcome the complimentary session please book a session try this let us like let us showcase this technique to you so that you can either become a client and just heal self or learn how to do this so that you can turn around and help thousands of people in your world and your your client base or start a healing business or a life coaching business or You know, because it's designed for life coaches, healing practitioners, transformational healers. It's designed for those people. It's very powerful. And it's definitely for fifteen years I've talked about how this is from the future. And I feel like we're finally here. We're at the future. We've arrived. That's amazing. It sounds like an amazing story. So and it's an amazing program to help heal your emotional trauma. And who doesn't have that? Right. So we've all been through. emotional trauma to some degree and some more than others. And certainly those life-changing moments, you know, birth, death, you know, loss, any sense of loss, whether it's financial or personal or professional or whatever, is going to cause trauma. And so most people just deal with it as you did, right, until you met Michael and went on this journey of transformation yourself. and NLP and techniques like it. From what I understand of an NLP, it's modeling behaviors that allow you to move past your past trauma. And the idea of questions, asking the right questions in a way that isn't threatening or triggering that will allow the client, the person that you're speaking to, alter their brain synapses, sort of neurolinguistic programming, right? So it's the way your brain interprets language and how you can, as a coach, use appropriate language to to get to a certain outcome for the client's benefit. So I get that. I understand it. And it sounds like what you've done has gone beyond that to combine with other techniques to help people through their trauma. So interesting. So I will certainly, we will have in the show notes a link to your site and how you can get that free consultation with Stacey and or Michael. Um, and Daniel, Daniel, Daniel. I think it's because I work with a lot of Michaels and so, you know, uh, I don't know, maybe that's why Daniel. Yeah. Um, so, so what does a typical session look like? And if you can give me like a two minute version. Our sessions are usually about fifteen minutes because that's all really we need. And again, yeah, because the we have something called the magic question. And the neat part is, is that and I'll ask you the magic question. I'll ask your platform this magic question. Here we go. Biggest problem you have in your life right now when you think about it and you don't need to tell me what all of that is. But when you think about it, how does it make you feel? If you could put it in one or two words, what would it be? So whatever that answer is, and the word floats to the top, right? Sure, immediately. We're connected at the unconscious level. Immediately, that's right. So I don't need to know as a practitioner or as a life coach, I don't need to know two hours of your story of what you're talking about or any of that or how mad you are, whatever it is. All I need to know is how you feel about whatever you're thinking about because that's actually the problem. And this is what Daniel has revolutionary. This is the disruption in Daniel. He's like... everybody's got it wrong people want to talk about their problems they want to reframe their problems that's not the problem the problem is is how you feel about whatever you're thinking about and you feel that way about thousands and thousands of your memories okay so what, what this technique does is it bypasses all the crap, all the other stuff that other modalities sit you in for years. Like when Daniel started to like, talk to me about reframing and I had already started the fixed code, like he'd already been doing the fixed code with me. And he, somebody was talking about reframing and I said like, what's reframing. I don't come from this world. And he's like, Oh, it's when you, you know, spend months and months and, and trying to reprogram your neural pathways and this, and I'm like, why the fixed code does that for you? He's like, I know, but the world is that hasn't caught up to us yet. So people want to spend thirty days breaking a habit or redoing something. I'm like, why? So again, I'm from the future. I love this technique and it does it all for you instantly. You don't have to do all the other legwork, right? Daniel and I joke around that a lot of the modalities are like horse and buggy and then old bicycle was made. And then, Oh, now we've got a car. Oh, there's a Porsche. This technique is like, like a spaceship. It's like, it's like teleporting. It's like you're in the future. It's all done. It's happened for you because of the way that Daniel has designed it. It is futuristic. It is so graceful and powerful and profound at the neural level. It's everything from physical to unconscious that in your unconscious mind runs, everything runs the show completely. So any program that is defunct or like a program would be something like hurt or betrayed or sad or angry. Those are programs. When you, you have a thought all of a sudden that triggers. Everything else. It triggers it in the physical body. It wakes this thing up. And once it's awake, you can feel it in the physical body. And now it's eating your energy. It's sucking your energy. It's draining you. Now this thing moves up into the thinking brain. We call this the grand illusion. And now you are running all the memories that are attached to that feeling, which is why you bounce around from being four years old to today to four days ago to all these stories are now in your mind. You're unconscious. You are no longer present. at all. You're bouncing between the past and the future in these storylines, but you feel the same way about every single one of them. This technique, without asking anything but the magic question, gets to the root of that problem, which is how you feel about that. Once we do the work, it feels like a guided meditation. It takes a couple of minutes. It's non-invasive. I don't ask creepy questions. I don't need to know why or who or what anything. And when you when you float back into your body and return to now you can no longer feel the connection between the feeling because the feeling's gone and those memories and there's thousands of them and so when you think about that whatever that is oh it is it is so beyond fascinating Because it's so quantum, and the design of this is so elegant. I'm definitely going to book that session. Oh, good. Yeah. You have to experience this. Yeah, definitely. It's like trying to say something. Yeah, I was thinking maybe we would bring you back on, and we could do it live with me. And I don't know how effective that would be as a podcast, but it would certainly demonstrate something. I don't know what, but... Anyway, I wanted to... Yeah, and there's nothing to see. Yeah, there probably isn't because it's all internal, right? Yeah, I figured that. That was really fascinating. I definitely want to try it with you or with Daniel or one of the practitioners that you have. I want to segue now into the compostable diapers, which I think is also very fascinating for a totally different reason, of course. The fixed code helps you get to the root of the things that hold you back, I'm assuming, whether it's personal, professional, whatever it might be, deep-rooted memories that hold you back, emotional trauma, whatever it might be that holds you back. and helps you fix yourself in a way and achieve your potential. And I think that the compostable diapers in some way, it's not the same thing, of course, but it helps people do something very, you know, you need diapers, right? For you raising a child, you need something to, a diaper of some sort. And in our world, in our modern world, we've gotten so used to the disposable diapers that are made with plastics and so on. And it's incredibly harmful to the environment and really not all that great for the babies either. So maybe you could tell me a little bit about how this got started. I know you said this was your sister's idea and just give me a brief history of this journey. I'd love to hear that. Sure. Sure. So about, uh, twenty three years ago, uh, Kim and Jason became pregnant and they started looking into alternatives for diapers for their baby. And my sister being my sister was outraged, um, at the, the harm and impact on the planet that the diapers in the market were doing. And she could see the future saying this is not going to end well for the planet. Um, and so they decided to meet with scientists to that, that were, were on the brink of developing. at the time, a hybrid. So they created a company. They decided to move and start this company called Gee Diapers that was creating an auction for parents who were conscious of the planet and really part of this movement of that each person can have an impact, a good impact or a less of an impact, let's say it that way, a footprint on the planet. And so they're coming to G diapers and they had created a hybrid diaper so you could actually flush this diaper down the toilet. And it just kind of with this wand and it dissolved and it was flushable. So how cool was that? And there was no chemicals in it. So it wasn't harming the water supply. And then as this company built and built and built, they were thriving, of course, and known all over the world. And unfortunately, with COVID, one of their main ingredients was that they needed in their diaper was being used in the masks. And so any product that was being used in masks were now pulled off all the shelves to be making the production of masks. So unfortunately, they found themselves in a situation where they could no longer, they couldn't supply. Their supply chain had completely crumbled and it just kind of went on too long. And so they had to reinvent themselves, which. You know, both my sister have been, have reinvented ourselves many, many times. It's, it's part of growth. It's part of how you keep moving in the world. Um, especially as you know, she identifies as a disruptor and I, I, I followed her to Samoa. So I, I don't, I totally back her play that her and her husband, um, who is, who's a doc has his doctorate in circular economy. It's a brilliant, brilliant man. And, um, they're a dynamo team. they decided to go fully compostable. So designing a diaper that was completely, one hundred percent compostable. And now how do they use that concept in a circular economy system? And so they started to develop this idea and they've done test pilots all over the world. And so we had kind of a base idea of what they saw on what the vision that they had. And in the spring of two thousand twenty three, my world was pretty good. You know, child was in university. What do I do with my third act? And Kim called me from Australia because she's married to an Australian. So she's lived she's lived in she she's an Australian citizen. And she called me and said, would I ever think would I ever think of doing this with her? And I, my answer was yes, let's do it. And she was kind of taken aback going, really? I'm like, sure, let's do this. So I moved to Australia so that her and her, and I moved in with her, her eight year old son at the time, who was just in university while they went to Europe and started to build the, the groundwork for all of this. And then my sister and I, we, when they when they got back in the october of she kind of looked at me she said do you think we should just go to samoa and see if and if it's viable. And I said, let's do it because I'll know really quickly if it's viable and what I can build and what I can't. And we decided, let's just do it. So we bought two plane tickets and came to Samoa. We knew nobody. We had no idea what was going on. Obviously, the language, like all of it. And we met such incredible people so quickly. And the reason we came to Samoa was that – The fifty-six heads of state of government for the Commonwealth were meeting in Samoa in October of twenty twenty four. So we knew that this was an opportunity to showcase this technique or this. I'm getting my passions mixed up here. Showcase this system of delivery, collect or delivery, collect and compost. to any head of state that was interested or you know their people that were interested we were doing a showcase here so we did it we um came in in twenty twenty three in in december we were here figuring out whether we could do it or not again met some incredible people really quickly like again total you know divine intervention and then we came back in the January and we lived here for the whole year and we did what we said we were going to do, which was we were going, we showcased it in two villages, one, an urban area and an urban village and one in a rural village so that we could see the differences and, you know, just get more, collect more data. So we had a hundred babies in the project and the, the village women, designed and collaborated on how they wanted this all to work. So everything from job sharing to what they wanted to learn, you know, did they want to be part of the inventory system group, like the finance? Did they want to be a part of the delivery and collect, which was kind of like the sales team, you know, like checking in on everybody every day? Or did they want to be part of the science part, which was the composting? So it was all of a sudden women who had never had jobs. They all work very hard here. but they're not paid for what they do in the villages, which is village culture. But that this project had come to their villages and were paying them and educating them. And now they were, as individuals, were now a part of something so much bigger because they also were, we taught them to do presentations so that when people from other countries came to these projects, they were the ones delivering the project, not us. So it was them and, you know, they were, they're learning English. They are, they're learning how to communicate just from a computer laptop, showing them what we do. And again, it has been. so powerful and so moving to be a part of such an incredible, innovative solution. That is, it's literally the solution as is the fixed code. Like there's no ands or buts. Like this is an answer. It's not the only answer, but it is, it works. This, this solves the problem. Both of my passions go to the root and solve the problem. That's amazing. You know, there's a lot of things you said there, especially with the second, the second passion project of yours, which is the compostable diapers that encompass so much. It's not just bringing a diaper to market. It's the fail fast mentality that you employed, right? So let's go to someplace where we can test it in a small, sort of a small sample size, both in a rural and an urban setting. Let's figure out the logistics of it, getting diapers to people, taking the diapers away from them, the logistics of getting it to a compost site. And then I'm assuming the soil, what do you do with the soil, providing that to farmers and things like that. All the educational opportunities, the job opportunities that you created. It sort of a bit of culture building, would you say? Oh, yes. And my sister's magical at that. Yeah, she's pretty incredible at all of those things. So it really is like between her husband's skills of that, you know, having that doctorate, that of circular economy and being able to teach it and empower knowledge to so many so quickly in real time, which is, again, very few doctorates actually get to put their work to practice. And we've taken... his doctorate and we're proving it. And so as he's expanding his, network and his um you know people that are stopping and listening the exciting thing is is that he's saying uh-uh my wife and my sister-in-law are there doing the work like this isn't just a paper this is real-time work we've got real data we've got real soil the university is on is very excited you know the ministry of agriculture is excited the ministry of women is excited here the ministry of environment is super excited so we have this this high level support Right down to the babies in the community who love the diapers. There's no rash. Like all the rash is gone. And, you know, people in hot communities like, you know, we're sitting on the equator here. I'm literally sitting on the dateline. It's hot to be in a plastic diaper with all that oil in it, these poor little bums. And so the moms are beyond excited because their babies' bums are rash-free. These diapers are breathable. What is the cost? I mean, is it comparable to a regular diaper, a disposable diaper? Or do you know yet at this point? Yeah. Well, right now, we're still in showcase. We're still in project. So right now, when we came to Samoa, one of my sister's um rule like her her one of her like disciplines was this is going to be price parity that nobody will will have to pay more than they're already paying um for to be a part of this project so yeah um so yeah it's price parity at the lowest the lowest diaper not the highest one like the lowest one so yeah yeah I wanted to also ask you know I mean obviously this requires a lot of um changes and how society operates, collecting the diapers, composting the diapers. It opens up new market niches, if you will. There's rich soil that can be used to supplement topsoil and farms and things like that. I'm sure that you're thinking about how to incorporate this on a more global scale, but with that comes challenges. Any thoughts there on what your next steps are? Well, we're at the spot now where governments have seen it. They're excited. And now they want to ban. Part of the coalition of this project is to ban the importation of plastic diapers. And so there are governments now that are looking at that coalition saying, we're in. Because we now have a solution. We can import these diapers online. With this circular economy system, Stacey and Kim are going to come to our countries, which we've said we will do, which now we are, you know, the countries are lining up. And it's exciting because with the government support, yeah, with the government support, It's now education and let's implement. So there are many countries now in the South Pacific and the Caribbean that are looking at this going, diapers is a big problem. There's other problems too, like malnutrition and all sorts of other things. But we're going to leave all that to someone else. Well, now you have all the soil to grow quality crops, right? Which might solve some of those problems. Exactly. Exactly. And we have a lot of people that are very excited, like the universities that are saying, oh, my gosh, is this the solution we've been looking for? Yeah. I wanted to. So we're running a little short on time. So I wanted to end this episode with a couple of lightning round questions. So I'm going to ask the first one. what would you say is the most surprising outcome you've seen from implementing the fixed code technique? The lives that have been saved. The impact lives. Okay. Awesome. The people. Yeah. The people that didn't take their lives. Yeah. Okay. Oh, Oh, that's heavy. Oh yeah. No, that's amazing. Yeah. Oh yeah. And, and you, and, Yes, and illnesses that have been cured, like long-term illnesses that just disappear, marriages that stay together, children that healed relationships with their parents and their siblings. It is helping people pass away. It is moving. I am humbled every day. in the work that I do with the Fix Code and the people that I meet. The Fix Code humbles me every day. Wow. That is powerful. Thank you for sharing that. It is. Yeah. All right. So between Toronto, Australia, and Samoa, which location has taught you the most about adapting to change? Oh, my gosh. You sent me this question and I thought, wow, that is so loaded because Toronto, kicked my ass in life. I lost my marriage. I lost the life that I wanted. It made me grow up. It made me get tough. It hardened me in a way that I didn't want to be hardened. Then the fixed coat came along and softened me. Australia gave me my freedom again. It gave me peace of mind. It gave me the healing I needed. It gave me the space that I needed to heal from all of what Toronto kicked my ass in over the years. It gave me the beach. It gave me sunshine. It gave me vision. It gave me distance. Like I could see distance across that beach. And it healed me. It healed my heart. And then Samoa gave me my laugh back. It gave me my passion. It lit up that. It lit my pilot light again for life and how big it can be and how much fun it can be and how much when you're with the right people and you've got the right support system and the right conversations going on around you, that anything is possible. And when you believe in something, it's not hard work anymore. But I needed all three. I couldn't have grown to this woman without Toronto. I couldn't have navigated my way through that. I call it the gauntlet because it was definitely a gauntlet. It never ended with the grace that I did it in without the fixed code. So again, like the gratitude that I have for the fixed code and the gratitude I have for this project that allowed me to just play again. Yeah. It allowed me to play in an, in an arena in my head that is just build Stacey, because my sister said, you can build me anything you want. Like here's the parameters, build, build me anything. And that. that just inspired me to build her something, um, that she would be proud of and that could take to the world. Um, and I knew it was going to be solid, same as the fixed code. I built the world, the fixed code, the way that I did so that the fixed code could stand and withstand the test of time. And it will. That's, that's amazing. That's really quite an inspiration. And I hope for people that are watching the show or listening can take inspiration from this because I mean to your to your earlier point you've made and remade yourself many times over and the way you described your journey from australia to um sorry from toronto to australia to samoa and the different things that you went through they they all shape us right our experiences do and in this case these experiences shaped you to who you are today and and um uh quite an inspiration all right one last question um complete the sentence The key to successful innovation is. Do it anyways. No matter how crazy it sounds, no matter how many people tell you, you can't do it anyways. I love it. Don't yeah. Don't stop because there's no money. Don't stop because you think you can't do it. Don't stop because. People said you said, no, don't stop because if both my sister and I, our lives would have been so different. Listen to the nose in our lives, which. We only ever listen to the yeses. So we'll keep going until we get the yes to keep going, whether that's just in our minds. And again, the fixed code has allowed me to use it to eliminate any limitations I have in myself to be able to do anything. We're all here for such incredible work. And if you're still not, what are you good at? That's the first clue. What are you good at? I was always building in puzzles and figuring complex problems out down to its simplicity. Yeah, I love your answers. All right. So I hope everyone enjoyed this episode. I really enjoyed speaking with you, Stacey, and learning from you. Thank you. I, uh, we will have, uh, in the show notes links to your, uh, your, your contact information links to the website. And if you want to learn more, is there, is there information available to learn more about the, um, compostable diapers as well? Will there be, uh, information about that? Yes, I'm sure. I I'm thinking my sister's website's up and running and it's, there is, there's a, the website it's called, it's, um, The greater good dot com. You can give that. Yeah, you can give that to me and we'll we'll make sure it's part of the show notes. If not right now. Yeah. Thank you so much for being here again. Thanks to all of you for for watching and listening. And we will see you in the next episode. Thanks again. Bye bye.